Du Bois and Martin Luther King, Jr., as well as obituaries, advertisements, editorials and illustrations. Teachers and students will find firsthand perspectives on notable Americans from Frederick Douglass and Booker T. I recall MSU suffering a crushing BTT loss to Wisconsin in 2008 and bouncing back to beat Temple and Pitt in Denver to reach the Sweet 16. the Harlem Renaissance the Civil Rights movement political and economic empowerment and more. I recall MSU suffering two crushing losses to Wisconsin in 2004 and not recovering, one and done. Coverage spans life in the Antebellum South the spread of abolitionism growth of the Black church the Emancipation Proclamation the Jim Crow Era the Great Migration to northern cities, the West and Midwest in search of greater opportunity rise of the N.A.A.C.P. Users can compare and contrast African American views on practically every major theme of the American past. A richly detailed record of the African American past African American Newspapers, 1827-1998 offers researchers valuable primary sources for such diverse disciplines as cultural, literary and social history ethnic studies and more. Selections were guided by James Danky, editor of "African-American Newspapers and Periodicals: A National Bibliography." Beginning with Freedom's Journal (NY)-the first African American newspaper published in the United States-the titles in this resource include The Colored Citizen (KS), Arkansas State Press, Rights of All (NY), Wisconsin Afro-American, New York Age, L'Union (LA), Northern Star and Freeman's Advocate (NY), Richmond Planet, Cleveland Gazette, The Appeal (MN) and hundreds of others from every region of the U.S. Part of the Readex America's Historical Newspapers collection, African American Newspapers, 1827-1998 was created from the most extensive African American newspaper archives in the United States-those of the Wisconsin Historical Society, Kansas State Historical Society and the Library of Congress. The Detroit High School Journalism Program was founded in 1985 by Detroit Public Schools Superintendent Arthur Jefferson along with Detroit Free Press President Jerome Tilis and Senior Managing Editor Neal Shine. Newly digitized, these newspapers published by African Americans can now be browsed and searched as never before.
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